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Razzle dazzle Reds get Super season on track for Wallaby homecoming

Tim Ryan of the Reds celebrates with team mates after scoring a try that was later disallowed during the round three Super Rugby match between Queensland Reds and Highlanders at Suncorp Stadium, on February 27, 2026, in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Albert Perez/Getty Images)

A try-of-the-year contender has kicked the Queensland Reds’ Super Rugby Pacific season into gear as they notched a bonus-point victory in Brisbane.

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The Reds produced some razzle dazzle attack and a series of brave defensive plays to withstand the improved Highlanders 31-14 at Suncorp Stadium on Friday.

Victory was important for a Reds side fresh off a second-round bye that had followed a limp season-opening loss to the NSW Waratahs.

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The Highlanders, who had beaten reigning champions the Crusaders in the first round, threw plenty at the Reds but the hosts were clinical at both ends.

The highlight came early when a Jock Campbell cut-out pass found Harry Wilson, who shovelled a no-look pass between his legs to Josh Flook.

Flook put boot to ball and Tim Ryan regathered and kicked ahead for new Reds captain Fraser McReight, who won the race to the ball.

“We got the foot to the ball a few times and … (ran the) fat man line, through the middle,” McReight laughed.

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“But after that Tahs game, we were hard on ourselves.

Attack

160
Passes
159
127
Ball Carries
125
250m
Post Contact Metres
267m
9
Line Breaks
4

“We got coached well, the senior boys stood up and had a great game plan and trusted it and reaped the rewards.”

The Reds led 12-0 and 19-7 before the Highlanders surged behind captain Timoci Tavatavanawai to bridge the gap to five points.

The hosts got creative though and Hunter Paisami played on quickly from a line-out that led to impressive second-rower Lukhan Salakaia-Loto bulldozing over for a deserved try.

Impressive back-rower Vaiuta Latu then scooped up the crumbs from a Filipo Daugunu grubber for the match-sealer.

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Te Kamaka Howden twice came close to stealing the bonus point off the Reds, but was firstly judged to have been held up over the line by Joe Brial and then spilt it as he reached for the chalk.

Carter Gordon, in his Reds debut after returning to rugby from an NRL stint, mixed quality moments with unforced errors as he shakes off rust from some pre-season leg niggles.

Coach Les Kiss was happy with what he saw.

“Of his own admission a couple of fumbles, few passes and kicks but he added a really calm head,” Kiss said.

“Gave us direction … he played strong and physical and that’s important. He’s in there, really happy with that hit-out as a first time. Wasn’t complete, but it was good and strong.”

Ruck Speed

0-3 secs
53%
55%
3-6 secs
31%
33%
6+ secs
16%
12%
82
Rucks Won
89

Highlanders coach Jamie Joseph was frustrated the side’s home form didn’t translate, ruing their inability to score points when in control in the opening 20 minutes.

“The fact we’ve only won four times here in 30 years tells you something,” he said.

“It’s not just this year, last year, year before … the Highlanders have really struggled here.

“But we’ve had a good week, trying to get our minds right for a big match.

“The Reds, they really took it to us, good luck to them.”

Watch Super Rugby Pacific live and free on RugbyPassTV in the USA! 

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cw 1 hour ago
Rassie Erasmus: 'I think we'll find a very desperate New Zealand team'

Disagree with parts of this John. The ABs are grossly underrated at the moment based largely on the England perferformance. But 6N has shown that impressions of teams from one or two losses or wins means little. It is performance against top teams over a sustained period that counts. The idea that England were clearly No2 in the world after beating the All Blacks once was overhype as the two losses against Scotland and Ireland show. Conversely to say they are rubbish now is equally dumb. In reality the ABs are deservedly No2. They have beaten all the top five teams from Nov 24-Nov 25 and have the second best win rate of all top teams against other top teams. Notably when they last toured SA they lost two close games. And the idea also that ABs don’t have the rugby player resource to tour SA successfully is just wrong. Several key forwards did not participate in the Autumn series representing hundreds of test caps - Ofa, Lomax, Aumua, Tuipolutu, Vaa’i, Blackadder, Jacobson, Papali’i etc. Multiple emergent and seasoned forwards will provide staunch dirt tracker opposition - Dyer, Norris, Bell, Renata, Numia, Lauaki, Shalfoon, Hannah, Ah Koi, Mafeleo, Iose, Howden, Fusitua, Beehre, Boshier…. The tour will also be in August, mid international season and the ABs will be peaking. The tour will actually provide the coach with the time to build culture and synergies. The underdog will drive them too. Would not write off ABs so easily.

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